I'm talking about unceremoniously tossing them off the air, contract be damned, with a claim about instigating violence. If you don't like my example, I'm sure you can come up with scores of others where a company might want to void a contract.
I'm talking about unceremoniously tossing them off the air, contract be damned, with a claim about instigating violence. If you don't like my example, I'm sure you can come up with scores of others where a company might want to void a contract.
Is that fundamentally different from choosing channels initially? Channel content and management might change and need reevaluation. Is your purpose to exclude snap judgements, just giving in to the latest witch hunt?
Somewhat, but it's more about the arbitrariness of it all. In my original post, I pointed out the cable news nets fanning the flames in Ferguson: "No violence today, but it usually starts after dark. We hope there isn't any, but usually the violence starts after dark. Let me repeat -- violence after dark. Though we hope there is none." And I pointed out the coverage of the Brown family member calling for people to "burn it down."
Consistency is key. Lacking that, when you have pretty-obviously-biased social media companies calling the shots, you get what we've seen the past few months.
I'm talking about unceremoniously tossing them off the air, contract be damned, with a claim about instigating violence. If you don't like my example, I'm sure you can come up with scores of others where a company might want to void a contract.
Is that fundamentally different from choosing channels initially? Channel content and management might change and need reevaluation. Is your purpose to exclude snap judgements, just giving in to the latest witch hunt?
Somewhat, but it's more about the arbitrariness of it all. In my original post, I pointed out the cable news nets fanning the flames in Ferguson: "No violence today, but it usually starts after dark. We hope there isn't any, but usually the violence starts after dark. Let me repeat -- violence after dark. Though we hope there is none." And I pointed out the coverage of the Brown family member calling for people to "burn it down."
Consistency is key. Lacking that, when you have pretty-obviously-biased social media companies calling the shots, you get what we've seen the past few months.